humanity
Mental health is a fundamental right; the future of humanity depends on it.
When My World Paused for a Stranger - Austin Shivaji Kumar
I remember the exact platform. Dadar station. The financial and chaos capital of Mumbai. The kind of place where the air feels thick with movement, where a thousand footsteps stomp through your silence. You don’t get a second to think. Or feel.
By Austin Shivaji Kumar10 months ago in Psyche
"When Nice People Are Dangerous: The Soft Violence of the Well-Meaning". Content Warning.
I used to think the worst harm came from people who were loud about their hate. The red-faced screamers, the slur-throwers, the ones who burned flags and broke windows. The ones whose violence made the news.
By Noman Khan 10 months ago in Psyche
Why ‘Good Vibes Only’ is Toxic (And How to Embrace Negative Emotions)
Introduction We live in a world that celebrates the mantra of "good vibes only." The idea that we must constantly stay positive, happy, and upbeat permeates everything from social media to self-help books. But what happens when we ignore our negative emotions and force ourselves to only feel good? In truth, this "good vibes only" mentality is not only unrealistic it can be downright toxic.
By Fahad Khan10 months ago in Psyche
The Forgotten Language of Touch: How Physical Contact Shapes Our Emotional Well-being
In a world dominated by screens and digital expressions, we have learned to communicate through messages, emojis, and reactions. We connect in online meetings, express love with virtual hearts, and offer condolences through comment sections. Yet, in our reliance on words and technology, we’ve drifted away from one of the oldest and most profound forms of communication—physical touch.
By Mysteries with Professor Jahani10 months ago in Psyche
The Invisible Weight: Living with the Emotional Baggage We Don’t Talk About
The Backpack No One Sees When my friend Julia died suddenly in a car accident, her husband, Mark, showed up to her funeral wearing a crisp suit and a smile that didn’t reach his eyes. He shook hands, accepted casseroles, and thanked everyone for their support. Two years later, at a dinner party, he casually mentioned he still sets a place for her at the table. The room fell silent. No one knew what to say—not because they didn’t care, but because grief, like so much of our emotional baggage, lives in the shadows.
By Mysteries with Professor Jahani10 months ago in Psyche
How Small Acts of Kindness Changed My Perspective on the World
The Day a Stranger’s Umbrella Taught Me About Humanity It was a gray, drizzly afternoon in Kyoto when I first grasped the quiet power of kindness. I stood outside a train station, drenched and frustrated, silently berating myself for forgetting my umbrella. Out of nowhere, a woman in her sixties—her silver hair peeking beneath a sunhat despite the rain—paused beside me. Without speaking, she opened her bright red umbrella and held it over both of us. We walked in silence for two blocks until she nodded toward my destination: a tucked-away tea shop. When I thanked her, she smiled and said, “The rain feels lighter when shared.” Her words lingered long after the clouds parted.
By Mysteries with Professor Jahani10 months ago in Psyche
The Subscription to Selfhood: How We Became Monthly Members of Our Own Identities. AI-Generated.
You can imagine it like this: Every morning, before your coffee, before the mirror, before even remembering your own name, you scroll. A “mindfulness pack” tells you how to feel today. A “core identity” booster recommends what to believe. And an “aesthetic lifestyle box” arrives monthly, so you can photograph the life you're supposed to be living.
By Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıran10 months ago in Psyche
🎯 The Nostalgia Paradox: Why We Keep Looking Back in a Forward-Moving World . AI-Generated.
"Nostalgia is a file that removes the rough edges from the good old days." — Doug Larson We live in a paradox. Every day, we wake up in a world that is accelerating forward—technologically, socially, and even existentially. We have artificial intelligence completing sentences, space tourism in development, and near-daily breakthroughs in science. Yet, amidst all this futuristic noise, our cultural compass points backwards.
By Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıran10 months ago in Psyche
Title: The Psychology of Belonging. AI-Generated.
We live in an era that glorifies the individual. "Be yourself," they say. "You don't need anyone." We champion the self-made entrepreneur, the solitary genius, the fiercely independent thinker. And yet, beneath the glossy Instagram quotes and TED talks about self-reliance, a quieter truth persists—humans desperately need to belong. Not just to survive, but to feel whole.
By Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıran10 months ago in Psyche











